The Conjure Woman Charles W. Chesnutt (best fiction novels .TXT) š
- Author: Charles W. Chesnutt
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āJulius,ā I said, āyou seemed to be affected by something, a moment ago. Was the mustard so strong that it moved you to tears?ā
āNo, suh, it waānāt de mustard; I wuz studyinā ābout Dave.ā
āWho was Dave, and what about him?ā I asked.
The conditions were all favorable to story-telling. There was an autumnal languor in the air, and a dreamy haze softened the dark green of the distant pines and the deep blue of the Southern sky. The generous meal he had made had put the old man in a very good humor. He was not always so, for his curiously undeveloped nature was subject to moods which were almost childish in their variableness. It was only now and then that we were able to study, through the medium of his recollection, the simple but intensely human inner life of slavery. His way of looking at the past seemed very strange to us; his view of certain sides of life was essentially different from ours. He never indulged in any regrets for the Arcadian joyousness and irresponsibility which was a somewhat popular conception of slavery; his had not been the lot of the petted house-servant, but that of the toiling field-hand. While he mentioned with a warm appreciation the acts of kindness which those in authority had shown to him and his people, he would speak of a cruel deed, not with the indignation of one accustomed to quick feeling and spontaneous expression, but with a furtive disapproval which suggested to us a doubt in his own mind as to whether he had a right to think or to feel, and presented to us the curious psychological spectacle of a mind enslaved long after the shackles had been struck off from the limbs of its possessor. Whether the sacred name of liberty ever set his soul aglow with a generous fire; whether he had more than the most elementary ideas of love, friendship, patriotism, religionā āthings which are half, and the better half, of life to us; whether he even realized, except in a vague, uncertain way, his own degradation, I do not know. I fear not; and if not, then centuries of repression had borne their legitimate fruit. But in the simple human feeling, and still more in the undertone of sadness, which pervaded his stories, I thought I could see a spark which, fanned by favoring breezes and fed by the memories of the past, might become in his childrenās children a glowing flame of sensibility, alive to every thrill of human happiness or human woe.
āDave useā ter bālong ter my ole marster,ā said Julius; āhe wuz raiseā on dis yer plantation, en I kin āmember all erbout āim, fer I wuz ole ānuff ter chop cotton wāen it all happenā. Dave wuz a tall man, en monstāus strong: he could do moā wuk in a day dan any yuther two niggers on de plantation. He wuz one er dese yer solemn kine er men, en nebber run on wid much foolishness, like de yuther darkies. He useā ter go out in de woods en pray; en wāen he hear de hanās on de plantation cussinā en gwine on wid dere dancinā en foolishness, he useā ter tell āem ābout religion en jedgmenā-day, wāen dey would haf ter gin account fer eveāy idle word en all dey yuther sinful kyarinās-on.
āDave had lāarnā how ter read de Bible. Dey wuz a free nigger boy in de settlement wāat wuz monstāus smart, en could write en cipher, en wuz alluz readinā books er papers. En Dave had hiāed dis free boy fer ter lāarn āim how ter read. Hit wuz āgāinā de law, but coāse none er de niggers didnā say nuffin ter de wāite folks ābout it. Howsomedever, one day Mars Walkerā āhe wuz de oberseahā āfounā out Dave could read. Mars Walker waānāt nuffin but a poā bockrah, en folks said he couldnā read ner write hisseāf, en coāse he didnā lack ter see a nigger wāat knowed moā dān he did; so he went en tole Mars Dugalā. Mars Dugalā sont fer Dave, en axā āim ābout it.
āDave didnāt hardly knowed wāat ter do; but he couldnā tell no lie, so he āfessed he could read de Bible a little by spellinā out de words. Mars Dugalā lookā mighty solemn.
āāāDis yer is a seāious matter,ā sezee; āitās āgāinā de law ter lāarn niggers how ter read, er ālow āem ter hab books. But wāat yer lāarn outān dat Bible, Dave?ā
āDave waānāt no fool, ef he wuz a nigger, en sezee:ā ā
āāāMarster, I lāarns dat itās a sin fer ter steal, er ter lie, er fer ter want wāat doan bālong ter yer; en I lāarns fer ter love de Lawd en ter ābey my marster.ā
āMars Dugalā sorter smileā en laf ter hisseāf, like he āuz mightāly tickleā ābout sumpān, en sezee:ā ā
āāāDoan āpear ter me lack readinā de Bible done yer much harm, Dave. Datās wāat I wants all my niggers fer ter know. Yer keep right on readinā, en tell de yuther hanās wāat yer beān tellinā me. How would yer lack fer ter preach ter de niggers on Sunday?ā
āDave say heād be glad fer ter do wāat he could. So Mars Dugalā tole de oberseah
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